[{"data":1,"prerenderedAt":-1},["ShallowReactive",2],{"word-tapio":3},{"word":4,"glossSources":12,"senses":14,"sensesFi":27,"frequency":33,"etymologies":44,"etymologyFi":9,"etymologyFiLinks":9,"synonymsByPos":52,"extendedSynonymsByPos":53,"antonyms":54,"hypernyms":55,"hyponyms":56,"englishTranslations":57,"wordnetGlosses":58,"fiSynonyms":59,"fiExtendedSynonyms":60,"fiAntonyms":61,"fiExtendedAntonyms":62,"fiBaseWords":63,"fiBaseWordsGuessed":11,"fiDerivedFrom":64,"fiCompounds":65,"fiDerived":67,"fiRelated":68,"fiTranslations":69,"exampleSentences":70,"inflectionForms":71,"allInflectionForms":9,"rhymePattern":99,"rhymeSamples":100},{"id":5,"lemma":6,"pos":7,"kotusClass":8,"kotusGradation":9,"homonymIndex":9,"ipa":10,"isStub":11},135564,"tapio","name",3,null,"/ˈtɑpio/",false,{"enWiktionary":13,"fiWiktionary":13,"wordnet":11,"aiGeneratedEn":11,"finnWordNet":11,"psychling":13,"termipankki":11},true,[15,19,23],{"index":16,"parentIndex":9,"gloss":17,"glossLinks":9,"tags":18},0,"The god of forest.",[],{"index":20,"parentIndex":9,"gloss":21,"glossLinks":9,"tags":22},1,"a male given name",[],{"index":24,"parentIndex":9,"gloss":25,"glossLinks":9,"tags":26},2,"a Finnish surname transferred from the given name",[],[28],{"index":16,"parentIndex":9,"glossFi":29,"glossFiLinks":30,"examplesFi":9,"tags":31,"source":32},"suomalaisessa mytologiassa metsän isäntä tai haltija",[],[],"fiwiktionary",{"totalAbs":34,"totalRelative":35,"avgRelative":36,"corpora":37},63020,24.010904,62.801796,{"s24":38,"klk":39,"lehdet":40,"wiki":41,"reddit":42,"opensub":43},12.439667,160.13461,156.65077,42.975025,4.3288174,0.2818951,[45],{"pos":9,"text":46,"links":47},"According to Saarikivi (2022), from tavata (dialectally also \"to catch, reach\") + -io, and thus as a name for a god of the hunt. The name has also been connected with Estonian taba (“padlock”) and Livonian tabā (“padlock”) (both connected with respective cognates of tavata), hinting at a theoretical noun *tapa (“trap”) (not attested in Finnish), which could have served as the direct etymon. Koivulehto took a different view, likewise connecting the word with tavata, but instead citing a Germanic comparandum, Proto-Germanic *gadōbiz (whence Old English gedēfe), proposing it as evidence of a semantic shift within Finnic (parallel to the development of Mielikki) through a sense like \"lenient, amenable\".",[48,50],{"text":49,"target":49},"tavata",{"text":51,"target":51},"-io",[],[],[],[],[],[],[],[],[],[],[],[],[],[66],"tapionpöytä",[],[],{},[],{"type":72,"essive_pl":73,"essive_sg":74,"elative_pl":75,"elative_sg":76,"abessive_pl":77,"abessive_sg":78,"ablative_pl":79,"ablative_sg":80,"adessive_pl":81,"adessive_sg":82,"allative_pl":83,"allative_sg":84,"genitive_pl":85,"genitive_sg":86,"illative_pl":87,"illative_sg":88,"inessive_pl":89,"inessive_sg":90,"partitive_pl":91,"partitive_sg":92,"accusative_pl":93,"accusative_sg":86,"comitative_pl":94,"nominative_pl":93,"nominative_sg":95,"instructive_pl":96,"translative_pl":97,"translative_sg":98},"nominal","Tapioina","Tapiona","Tapioista","Tapiosta","Tapioitta","Tapiotta","Tapioilta","Tapiolta","Tapioilla","Tapiolla","Tapioille","Tapiolle","Tapioiden","Tapion","Tapioihin","Tapioon","Tapioissa","Tapiossa","Tapioita","Tapiota","Tapiot","Tapioineen","Tapio","Tapioin","Tapioiksi","Tapioksi","-ɑpio",[101,102,103],"lapio","ojalapio","morsiuskapio"]